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Top 10 Winter Survival Tools and Tactics [Lifehacker Top 10]

No matter how many times we go through it, winter always seems to catch us by surprise—a chilly, costly, inconvenient surprise. Prepare yourself for the rest of this season with helpful and healthy projects, clever tricks, and energy savers.

Photo by Roby Ferrari.

10. Make your own lip balm

Sure, Blistex and all the other lip balms found at the checkout counter aren’t that expensive, but they’re easy to lose, and often quite funky-tasting. Enviro-blogger Lisa Tae-Ran Schroeder shows us how to make our own lip balm in batches, creating a Burt’s-Bees-like salve that you can customize for better scents and, um, flavors, and give away as a thoughtful gift once you’ve refilled your lip balm tubes. (Original post)

9. Make shoveling a bit easier

The snow—it never stops coming, and it laughs at your efforts to get ahead on it. When the stuff gets sticky and hard to toss, grab a can of canola oil cooking spray, commonly known as Pam, and spray your shovel with it. No more stuck snow clumps, and your shoveling blade is a proper weapon in the war against precipitation. Photo by *clarity*.

8. Make homemade cold and chill remedies

They’re not FDA-approved, but piping-hot drinks and throat-soothing elixirs are usually much more welcome than a swift shot of Afrin. If you’re just cold and looking for something that feels really warm, try some homemade sbiten—or, as the Russsians call it, ???????. If your throat's sore from a cough, nasal drip, or yelling at that accursed driveway-entombing snowplow, give it a break with a honey/lemon/ginger infusion. Want something with a little more kick? Our readers have lots of family secrets and DIY detoxifiers, many of them involving a little 21-and-over kick. Photo by Jenny Downing. (Original posts: Sbiten, infusion).

7. Make your fireplace more efficient

Having a fireplace does great things for your house’s resale value. Actually using it lets you stay in one warm area and not have to keep a whole house quite so toasty. Learn how you can improve your fireplace’s throughput with a fireback, glass doors, and other upgrades at Mother Earth News’ efficiency guide. (Original post)

6. Keep your hands warm (and useful)

As far as gloves go, we like the Glacier Gloves for their sheer cold and moisture-repelling power, and the Dots Gloves for their ability to operate your cellphone’s touchscreen while your fingers stay encased in comfort. If you’re not looking to fork over $50 or $30 when you’ve got perfectly functional gloves, though, you can throw together some rice-powered, microwave-able mitten warmers. Or, if you’re feeling evil-scientist-y, you can make any pair of gloves work with touchscreens with just a bit of conductive thread. (Original posts: Glacier Gloves, DOTS Gloves, mitten warmers, touchscreen gloves).

5. Winter-proof your body

When it’s so cold you can “feel it in your bones,” you’re really feeling it in your face, hands, and everywhere else on your skin. Real Simple goes step-by-step in helping you avoid the worst wear and tear from the weather, including the most important factor—timing. We'd be remiss if we didn't mention this DIY heated clothing, which basically turns your long johns into self-wired thermal blankets, but let’s restate the obvious: be really careful if you’re hooking your clothes, and legs, up to a battery. Photo by buildscharacter. (Original posts: winter-proofing, heated clothing).

4. Really use your freezer

Left on its own, it’s easy to let your freezer become little more than an overflow box for the stuff that’s just about to go bad in the fridge and recipe ideas that never quite launched. If you’re buying food when it’s fresh (second half of that monster post) and using your freezer efficiently, you can actually buy less food during the cold season. That way, you save your bucks for when the getting’s good in spring.

3. Have emergency kits for home and car

Our weekend editor Jason lives in a land where being entirely trapped by snow, whether at home or in a car, is a real possibility. It hasn’t gotten that dire yet, but he’s planned ahead, and so should you. Take his tips on putting together a winter emergency kit for your home or car, and you’ll feel less like a victim of inevitable precipitation and more like a great winter preparedness story waiting to happen. Photo by Clarity.

2. Keep exercising

Forget what you’ve heard about cold-weather exercise—it's perfectly fine, if you take the right precautions. About.com offers up a few tips for keeping safe and warm on the roads, and Runner’s World offers a webapp designed to help you decide what you should wear. MetaFilter founder Matt Haughey has previously outlined the best gear for winter cycling. Some dreary days, though, it’s not the pants or gloves you need to get running, but motivation. One winter runner learned to trick her mind into running all winter, using a few tricks from psychology, chemistry, and plain old bragging rights. Photo by lululemon athletica. (Original post: myths, running, cycling).

1. Lower your heating bill

It’s not the most fun of weekend projects, but putting a dent in your energy costs does free up money for things that are much more fun. If you’re an apartment dweller, take the advice of many winter-hardened Ask MetaFilter posters on non-permanent upgrades for a drafty rental. Got your own place? We’ve previously focused on easy ways to stay warm, as well as the more intensive money-saving moves that are worth the hassle. (Original posts: apartments, Easy ways)


When winter's finally over—only 70-plus days to go!—what will you consider your most valuable winter behavior or equipment? Get all sturdier-than-thou in the comments.




Make Any Pair of Gloves Work with a Touchscreen [DIY]

It’s getting cold outside in many regions, and gloves are becoming the norm. If you want to control your touchscreen phone without exposing your hands, or paying for specialty gloves, Instructables suggests grabbing a needle, and some conductive thread.

Conductive thread—no, we'd never heard of it, either. Instructables user Grathio points us to this explanation at Fashioning Technology, which also suggests where to grab some of it. You won’t need to be skilled at sewing to pull off this glove modification, but you will need to take the time to test out what works with your screen. Grathio suggests leaving a wider, messier spread of thread on the inside of the glove to facilitate contact with your finger, but limiting the thread exposed on the outside to a tightly wound circle, about a quarter inch in diameter.

If you are good with a needle, you’ll likely be able to make the end result look a little neater. And if you’re really good and want to offer notes to anyone else looking to tackle this project, drop the advice (or link) in the comments here.






From the Tips Box: Wood Chopping Tricks and How-To [Tips]

Last week we shared an ingenious hack for chopping firewood more efficiently and the tips box lit up with great tips from readers with wood-chopping experience.

Photo by sunpig.

Lifehacker reader Peter has been heating his home with wood for over 40 years. He wrote in with this tip:

An added bonus is to have a heavy solid base of concrete, pavement or a huge flat stone under the log, and a 2′ x 2′ square of 3/4″ plywood over that.

The concrete gives a solid non-bouncing base, and the plywood protects the splitting maul edge. No axe is involved in splitting. Axes are thin, lighter than a maul (2-3 lb.), and sharp for cutting across wood grain when felling a tree or cutting off branches. A maul is much heavier (6-10 lb.), duller, and designed to split along the wood’s grain. The heavy base under the log puts all of the maul’s splitting energy into the splitting, with virtually no bounce.

Mark enjoys chopping wood as a break from life in the office and is full of tips:

When splitting smaller logs than those in the bungee demo, if you get your axe stuck in, rather than struggle to get it out, lift the log up, still on the axe, to full height, flip it round and bring the axe back to your chopping block, axe back (rear) down. This forces the stuck log down onto the axe and usually splits it first time.

I notice the bungee demo was splitting rounds which were on the ground. I always split on a block, usually a large trunk, bedded on some hardcore which is then covered in a good layer of sawdust and chips. Reckon his rounds were too big for this but it is worth a note for smaller rounds.

For twisty logs that won’t split, I use a thing called a Wood Grenade. This is a cone shaped device with a clever, slight twist to the cone that, when driven into a log will split it.

You can find the “Wood Grenade” or variations at most hardware stores or order it online. Check out this example to get an idea of what to look for when you’re shopping.

John writes in with some tips on storing your firewood properly:

If you're a veteran to using a wood burning stove, this won't be much of a lesson but for the greenwoods out there—ha!—this'll save 'em some headaches. You need to store wood for at least a year to season it (or pay a premium when you buy wood for seasoned wood.)

Everyone talks about creosote [Ed. Note: unburnt particulate that can clog up your chimney and cause fires] and how one wood is better than the other but the real issue is drying. Wood needs to be bone dry. Store it so that it’s not sitting on the ground and cover it so that it doesn’t get rained or snowed on, but make sure the sides are open. Throwing a tarp over the whole pile won’t help you a bit, it’ll just turn your wood pile into a little greenhouse and make the drying time longer than it needs to be.

If you can place the woodpile [where] it’ll get a nice breeze most of the year, that’ll help things along. Everything you do when stacking and storing wood should be focused on drying it faster and keeping it dry. Don’t wrap it up in plastic! Don’t let it get rained on all year! You’ll have a big stinking pile of rotten wood and not a huge pile of home-heating magic.

All excellent tips, thanks for writing in guys! If you have a wood chopping or storing trick of your own to share, let’s hear about it in the comments.






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